Financial Update
December 10, 2019
Board of Trustees
Financial Results: Actual vs. BudgetedFiscal Year to Date September 2019
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Fiscal Year 2019Actual
thru SEP 2019
Authorized Budget
(per Segal 6-17-19)
Variance Fav/(Unfav)
Budget
Beginning Cash Balance $1.297b $1.261b $35.4m
Plan Revenue $946.8m $930.4m $16.4m
Net Claims Payments $857.6m $867.4m $9.8m
Medicare Advantage Premiums $40.9m $43.7m $2.8m
Net Administrative Expenses $21.5m $45.8m $24.3m
Total Plan Expenses $919.9m $956.9m $37.0m
Net Income/(Loss) $26.8m ($26.5m) $53.4m
Ending Cash Balance $1.324b $1.235b $88.8m
Financial Results: Actual vs. BudgetedCalendar Year to Date September 2019
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Calendar Year 2019Actual
thru SEP 2019
Authorized Budget
(per Segal 6-17-19)
Variance Fav/(Unfav)
Budget
Beginning Cash Balance $1.118b $1.118b $0m
Plan Revenue $2.778b $2.750b $27.4m
Net Claims Payments $2.358b $2.402b $43.5m
Medicare Advantage Premiums $125.8m $130.6m $4.8m
Net Administrative Expenses $87.6m $181.8m $94.2m
Total Plan Expenses $2.572b $2.714b $142.4 m
Net Income/(Loss) $205.9m $36.0m $169.8m
Ending Cash Balance $1.324b $1.154b $169.8m
2021 Benefits
December 10, 2019
Board of Trustees Meeting
Three-Year Strategy: Move Towards Medicare Based Reimbursement Rates
2019• Minimize Changes
• 80/20 - Simplify 80/20 OOP & Refine the Designated Provider Program• 70/30 – No changes• HDHP – Continues to be available to non-permanent employees only
2020
• Move to two distinct plan design options with a new provider reimbursement model
• 80/20 – No change• 70/30 – Modify the plan design to differentiate it from the 80/20 Plan• HDHP – Continues to be available to non-permanent employees only
2021
• Add incentives for CPP providers, introduce pain management alternatives & continue to focus on high-cost members with chronic conditions• PCP copay waiver• Specialist and Mid-Tier provider copay reductions• Provide more non-opioid pain management resources• Evaluate further cost-reductions for diabetic medications
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The Plan has taken the first step to move the network towards Medicare Based Reimbursements. In 2021, the Plan needs to further invest with the providers who agreed to join the network and look at other ways to reduce costs.
CPP Provider Incentive
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Copay 70/30 80/20
PCP Copay
$0 for CPP PCP on ID Card $30 for non-CPP PCP on ID card $45 for any other PCP
$0 for CPP PCP on ID Card$10 for non-CPP PCP on ID card $25 for any other PCP
Specialist Copay $47 for CPP Specialist$94 for other Specialists
$40 for CPP Specialist$80 for other Specialists
Speech, Occupational and PhysicalTherapy Copay
$36 for CPP Providers$72 for other Providers
$26 for CPP Providers$52 for other Providers
• Reward CPP providers by reimbursing a higher percentage of the copay.
Offer Additional Non-Opioid Pain Management Options• The Plan is continuing to explore ways to promote non-opioid pain
management options.• The following two opportunities would be a benefit change:
• Promote existing Physical Therapy Benefit• By reducing the copay for CPP physical therapist, this benefit may
become more affordable for some members• Add dollar-limited coverage for Acupuncture
• Many self-funded plans already offer acupuncture to treat pain management
• Some plans also cover it for the treatment of nausea and vomiting associated with surgery, chemotherapy or pregnancy.
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Medications for Diabetics• The Plan already has a pharmacy “diabetic supply” tier to eliminate any
cost barriers to these supplies.• $5 on the 80/20 Plan• $10 on the 70/30
• Plan members are also protected from the high cost of insulin as they are only responsible for the Tier 2 copay when they utilize a preferred brand.• $30 on the 80/20 Plan• $47 on the 70/30 Plan
• The Plan is reviewing options to reduce the insulin copay even further to encourage medication adherence.
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2020 Open Enrollment Results
December 10, 2019
Board of Trustees Meeting
Open Enrollment Recap• Open Enrollment (OE) was held November 2-19, 2019.
• All Active and Non-Medicare members were moved to the 70/30 Plan and needed to take action to enroll in the 80/20 Plan or to reduce their premium.
• Non-Medicare members did not have to complete the tobacco attestation for the 70/30 Plan, as it will remain premium-free for eligible retirees.
• All Medicare members remained in their current plan and could choose to change plans if they desired. They were not auto-enrolled into a different plan.
2020 Open Enrollment Results: Non-Med Prime• What happens to Non-Medicare primary subscribers who did not take
action during Open Enrollment?• Active Subscribers will be enrolled in the 70/30 Plan for 2020.• They have missed the opportunity to:
o Elect the 80/20 Plano Drop coverage for themselveso Add or drop dependentso Reduce their premium by $60 per month by completing the tobacco attestation
• Non-Medicare Primary Subscribers in the Retirement System will also be enrolled in the 70/30 Plan for 2020.
• While they are not impacted by the tobacco attestation or the inability to drop coverage, they also missed opportunity to:
o Elect the 80/20 Plan o Add dependents
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Eligibility and Enrollment Support Center• Given the shortened OE period, the Plan’s Eligibility and Enrollment
Support Center offered extended call center hours throughout OE. • Extended hours included:
• Monday-Friday, 8am-10pm• Saturday, 8am-5pm• Sunday, Noon-5pm
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Open Enrollment Call Volume
Week 1 Week 2 Week 3 Total
28,641 26,721 34,551 89,913
Last year the call center took 131,958 calls.
2020 Open Enrollment Results• Open Enrollment by all accounts was successful. • Online enrollments were similar in volume to last year. • Call volume was down significantly, which may be the result of fewer
Medicare members calling, the shortened OE period or fewer members needing assistance to complete their enrollment online.
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OE Statistics at a Glance
Online Enrollment 337,425
Telephonic Enrollment 44,818
Total Enrollments 382,243
Distinct Subscribers 325,921 (96%)
338,480 subscribers should have
completed OE.
Tobacco Attestation Completion Rate (Active Members)
298,708 94%
18,1356%
Complete Incomplete
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2020 Open Enrollment Results: Active Employees• Active employees are the most impacted if they do not complete OE.
Fortunately, 94% (298,708) of our Active employees completed Open Enrollment.
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Entity Total Employees that Took Action
Percentage of Employees that Took Action
State Agencies 63,747 95%
Charter Schools 4,894 94%
Community Colleges 14,764 97%
Local Governments 10,677 95%
Public Schools 151,720 93%
Universities 52,906 95%
2020 Open Enrollment Results: 100% Participation• Several employing units had 100% participation! Listed below are a few
that were able to accomplish this:
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Town of Forest CityWestern Piedmont Community College
Gates County SchoolsFranklin Academy
Catawba Community CollegeYancy County SchoolsTown of Sunset Beach
Pamlico County Schools
Newton Conover City SchoolsOnslow Water and Sewer Authority
Martin Community CollegeCounty of Bladen
Coastal Carolina Community CollegeTown of Spindale
Roanoke Chowan Community CollegeLake Lure Classical Academy
Open Enrollment Results: Non-Medicare Primary Plan Selections
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229,094 41%
329,81659%
70/30 Plan 80/20 Plan
80/20 Subscribers – 222,02380/20 Dependents – 107,793
Total – 329,816
70/30 Subscribers – 138,86870/30 Dependents – 90,226
Total – 229,094
2020 Open Enrollment Results: Medicare Primary• Medicare Primary members may have a second opportunity to make
changes. • Medicare Advantage Open Enrollment Period will run from January 1 –
March 31, 2019. • Plan members enrolled in a Medicare Advantage Plan will be able to
make one change during this period • Plan members enrolled in the 70/30 Plan will not be able to change
plans
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Open Enrollment Results: Medicare Primary Plan Selections
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135,963, 74%
21,968, 12%
26,290, 14%
UHC Base
UHC Enhanced
Traditional 70/30
• 184,221 Medicare Members• Counts are based on the last day of Open Enrollment.• The final enrollment results will not be available until the end of the Medicare Advantage Open
Enrollment Period.
2020 Open Enrollment – Next Steps• 2020 ID Cards will be dropping in the mail soon.• 2020 premium invoices will generate this week for employing units.• OE exceptions are under way!
• To date, Plan staff have already processed about 817 OE exceptions, with 74 pending review.
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642 CVS MinuteClinic Exceptions – for members who live more than 25 miles from a MinuteClinic. They will receive a waiver of the MinuteClinic tobacco cessation visit requirement.*44 exceptions were denied for members that did live within 25 miles of a MinuteClinic
94 Took no action during OE – Evenly split between retirees and active subscribers.
37 Completed OE, but did something wrong.
Pharmacy/Health Care Support Program Update
December 10, 2019
Board of Trustees Meeting
Pharmacy Updates• The Plan’s contract requires CVS Caremark to pass 100% of all rebates and
pharmaceutical manufacturer payments back to the Plan.• Rebates significantly reduced trend, driving it down from 9.4% to 4.6% for 2019. • January – September 2019:
Gross Cost = $866MRebates = $230M (up from $190M over same period in 2018)
• The Plan has also seen a steady rise in adherence in the diabetic population since the beginning of the CVS Caremark contract. The Plan will continue to look for ways to build on this.
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62.2% 63.2% 64.3%
SHP 2017 SHP 2018 SHP 2019
% Optimal Diabetic Adherence*9.4%
4.6%
Trend Jan-Sep 2019
Before Rebates After Rebates
* % Optimal member has ≥ 80% Medication Possession Ratio, meaning they have prescriptions filled 80% of the days in a six-month period
Health Care Support Program – Year-to-Date Results
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10,371members were targeted for nurse interventions
43.5% of eligible members
successfully engaged with a nurse
464 members are using the
Wellframe app to interact with their care team
96%Member satisfaction
among engaged members
Data Analytics Program Update
December 10, 2019
Board of Trustees
Data Analytics Team
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Ravi Chinnaraj, Data Analytics Manager. Master’s in Software Engineering from Central Michigan University. Ravi was the Manager of the Business Intelligence area at UNC Health Care and has worked with the Ford Motor Company and Kroger.
Frank DeVita, Program Director. Master’s degree in International Finance from Fairleigh Dickinson University. Frank has over 30 years experience performing business improvement through operations and process re-engineering, technology and business intelligence implementations, and organizational change. Frank has previous experience with NC DHB and NC DHHS, and many Fortune 1000 companies.
Lou Pica, Business Intelligence Developer. Master’s degree in Health informatics from Duke University Fuqua School of business. Lou has worked as a data and systems analyst at Quintiles designing and developing data warehouses and analytical solutions.
Gerald Belton, Business Intelligence Developer. Master’s in Statistics from North Carolina State University. Gerald has worked as a data analyst for the NC Department of Health and Human Services. Gerald teaches data analytics as an Adjunct Instructor at Wake Tech Community College.
Mara Larson, Business Intelligence Developer. Master’s degree in Public Health from The George Washington University. Mara has worked as an Epidemiologist with the North Carolina Division of Public Health.
Reshma Patel, Business Intelligence Developer. Master's degree in Computer Science from Virginia Commonwealth University. Reshma has worked as a data analyst at Revlon.
Prabha Dinasarapu, Business Intelligence Developer. Master’s degree in Organic Chemistry from Osmania University and is a Certified SAS Programmer. Prabha has worked as a SAS Developer and SAS Analyst and as a Junior Scientist at Dr. Reddy’s Laborites Ltd.
Nuzhat Chowdhury, Business Intelligence Developer. Bachelor’s degree in Statistics from the University of Illinois. Nuzhat has worked as a data analyst at IRI, Intel Corporation, and at Nike.
Contractors
Employees
Data Warehouse Goals• Single source of truth for membership, provider, utilization and claims
financial data
• Provide direct insight into the Plan’s business operations and results
• Enable business analysts to focus on value-add reporting and analysis rather than data preparation activities
• Reduce / eliminate reliance on vendor reports and raw data
• Deliver cross vendor reporting rather than vendor silo reporting
• Improve operational processes through automation of vendor data reconciliations
• Limit PHI/ PII data distributed
3
Data Driven State Health Plan Roadmap
4
Approve & Design
2011 - 2016
Current EffortsPrior Efforts
Build & Implement2011
• NextGen project defined to activate Business Intelligence tools with GDAC / SAS, and begin acquiring data from vendors
• 2014
• SHP implements document management system (Documentum) in GDAC / SAS environment to acquire initial data
• 2016
• Approximately 60 analytic requests performed using untreated vendor data
• Assessment conducted comparing Truven Health Analytics Suite and Custom SAS HCDM
Note: These prior efforts never achieved clean data, or data that could be readily consumed by business analysts or the data analytics team
• Implement TPA datasets
2017 2018 2019 2020 2021
Operate, Maintain, and Deliver
• Nov 2016: Plan BOT authorizes development of custom HCDM
• Initial HCDM design and build
• Hire new data analytics team
• Complete initial HCDM
• Design and Develop > 800 data quality checks, dashboard, and repair process
• Acquire & test > 100 Reference Code sets to interpret the data
• Deliver > 35 data and analytic requests
• Create Member table
• Create Medicare Primary/ Secondary ID
• Load > 350 million coverage, claims and provider records
• Repair original design errors
• Identify original design errors & deficiencies
• Develop strategy and plans to achieve objectives
• Design and implement Plan information governance charter and team • Design & create additional DataMarts for
Business Analysts
• Implement Self Service Analysis and Visualizations
• Add additional reference and vendor data
• Begin What Happened analysis
• Begin Why Did It Happen analysis
• Begin What Will Happen analysis
• Begin Fraud, Waste & Abuse analysis
Foundation activities
Development activities
Usage activities
HCDM= Health Care Data Model
Reliable Analysis
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What Happened Why Did It Happen What Will Happen Fraud, Waste & Abuse
• Medical Claims Data• Retail Pharmacy Claims
Data• Members• Members Coverage data• BCNC Providers
Clean, standardized, usable data
• Medical Claims DataMart• Retail Pharmacy DataMart• Members DataMart• Members Coverage
DataMart• BCNC Provider DataMart
• Medical Unlikely Edits• Performance Guarantees• Incorrect diagnoses and
procedure coding• Once in a lifetime
procedures• Upcoding• Physician and Outpatient
Facility Unbundling• Provider Peer Group
Analysis• False claims
• Additional code sets and knowledge
• Member Medical Insights
Health Care and Insurance Data Knowledgeable Data Team
Monthly claims and member information by Plan Type, Groups, County, Subscriber/ Dependent Relationship Type, Medicare, Retiree, and Vendor.
• TBDFinancials, provider and member information by diagnoses and procedure conditions across the treatment lifecycle
for
Wholesale Data(Used to create Consumer Data)
Finalized Paid Medical claims records
178 mm
Finalized Medical claims records215 mm
Finalized Paid Medical claims records for Non-
MedicareTBD mm
Analysis
Reporting
Data Mining
Visualizations
Finalized Paid Medical claims records for
MedicareTBD mm
Finalized Denied Medical claims records
37 mmFinalized Paid Medical
claims records for retirees41 mm
Finalized Paid Medical claims records for non-
retirees137 mm
Finalized Paid Medical claims records by
Professional groupings
Summary information
BCNC Medical Claims records
UHC Medical Claims records
HUMANA Medical Claims
records Medical Claims records233 mm
Note: Data received from vendors is loaded as-is with errors, duplicates, reversals, and other “dirty data” conditions.
County by county information
Clean, Standardized Financial Claims
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Farms Processing TableRetail PackagingWarehouse Wholesale PackagingCleansing
SAS Business Users: Plan Integration,Finance,Plan Benefits,Planning,Pharmacy,Communications,Segal
SHP Data Analytics Team
Health Care Data Model Costs and Comparisons
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ItemContractor and
Hosting Amount NotesProjected HCDM Build Spend 6,964,541$
Actuals2016 1,056,406$ 2017 2,788,867$ 2018 1,068,250$ Program Director change at end of 20172019 1,255,109$
Actual Build Spend 6,168,632$
Savings against Projection 795,909$
Build & Implement Operate & Maintain
Deliver
Item SHP COTS EstimateAnticipated Annual Maintenance
Contractors 840,000$ 844,800$ Hosting & Reference Datasets 50,000$ 1,567,717$
Total 890,000$ 2,412,517$
SAS Estimated Costs Hours Rate Quantity Estimated Cost Practical Adjustment Practical Estimate NotesVisual Analytics Dashboards 815 200.00$ 7 1,141,000$ 2.0 2,282,000$ Predictive Modeling Reports 815 200.00$ 5 815,000$ 2.0 1,630,000$ Total 1,956,000$ 3,912,000$
SHP In-House Estimated Costs Quantity Estimated Cost Practical Adjustment Practical Estimate NotesMS Power BI Dashboards 815 62.50$ 7 356,563$ 1 356,563$ SHP Healthcare Data SME'sPredictive Modeling Reports 815 62.50$ 5 254,688$ 1 254,688$ SHP Healthcare Data SME'sTotal 611,250$ 611,250$
Savings 1,344,750$ 3,300,750$
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Appendix
Completed HCDM Business Analysis Requests
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Business Requested Project Business Purpose Business Impact
1 All county analysisIdentify market size (members and spend) by NC county; members, members with claims, # of claims per member, # claims per provider.
CPP initiative. In response to the general inquires being submitted by providers, SHP published this analysis on the Plan's website.
2 Open Enrollment 2018 Medicare Advantage Migrations
Strategically analyze Medicare member movement for the UHC plan for CY 2018.
UHC said this MA population would likely be more costly. This analysis disproved this concern and potentially saved the Plan premium dollars.
3 BenefitFocus BMF006 report re-creation
Provide Segal and Finance with Member level coverage details.
Report no longer available from Benefitfocus, used by multiple user groups, both internal and external.
4 CCPN PCP Selection ReportIdentify how many members selected a CCPN provider, and how many CCPN providers have opted into the CPP network.
CPP initiative. CCPN is operating as an intermediary for contracting purposes, therefore it is necessary to be able to list the participating practices.
5 Chiropractic AnalysisRequested by the Chiropractic Association The Association wanted to make the case that chiropractic
services should be expanded as a benefit to curb spending on opioids, ER visits and surgeries for low back pain.
6 Claims Recovery Review# of members who were directly reimbursed for claims > $10K between January 1, 2015 and current
Recoveries
7 Critical Access Rural Hospitals Identify NC Critical Access Rural Hospitals CPP initiative related.
8 CVS Tier CheckAutomate the Drug Tier reconciliation currently manually performed by Pharmacy team.
Directly reduced hours spent on reconciling.
9 Data Quality Initiative Automate the reconciliation of data submitted to the Plan by the Vendors. 75% complete.
Identify adjudication problems, and enable future identification of waste and abuse.
10 Death Claims Incurred After Analysis What claims were incurred after members deaths. Recoveries
11 Dependent count by age stratification
Create membership members by 5-year age stratifications.
Set the baseline for evaluating if the Plan should make family tiers more favorable by attracting dependents.
12 Facility Fees, Clinic Fees, and EOB analysis
What is the State Health Plan paying for facility fees, clinic fees, and how transparent are these fees on the Explanation of Benefits (EOB).
Modify the EOB. The Plan needs to know the true impact of facility fees across the system. These fees impact Plan members in a big way, and may not be appropriate in some/many situations.
Completed Business Analysis Requests
10
Business Requested Project Business Purpose Business Impact
13 Financial Triangulation ReportAutomate the reconciling of UHC paid versus incurred claims to validate premiums and charges. Directly reduced hours spent on reconciling
14Guilford Tech Community College flu analysis
Number of employees/subscribers with the flu by week and month for the 2016/ 2017 school year. Member's health outcomes
15 Johnston County Flu shotsAnalyze the ratio of employees that got the flu shot billed on the 80/20 plan and the 70/30 plan in 2017. Johnston County Request
16 Medicare Advantage Repricing RFP
Create data files for Medicare, COBRA, and Direct Bill Members for MA RFP bidders to use to underwrite bid quotes.
Provide Segal with data to be able to review and score the MA RFP submissions.
17 Medical Drug SpendAnalyze the total members medical drug spend for commercial medical and Medicare Part B. Required for federal information gathering.
18 Medicare Part B - PhantomAnalyze Medicare Part B eligible Rx claims paid by SHP that should have been paid as Phantom B.
Identified that the Plan did not significantly spend on Phantom B.
19 New Hanover County AnalysisAnalyze CY 2018 claims data for New Hanover Regional Medical Center costs.
Review to understand how the pending sale of NHRMC might impact the Plan and its members.
20 Orthotics Claims AnalysisClaims per member where the plan paid for more than one orthotic. Recoveries
21 Peanut AllergyMembers between the age of 4 and 17 who have peanut allergy. To forecast Plan spend on new peanut allergy drug.
22Retiree Drug Subsidy 2017, 2018, and 2019 Audit CVS Retiree Drug Subsidy submissions to CMS.
Identified approximately $2,202,200 in additional subsidy due to the Plan.
23 Top 70 shoppable codesAverage plan paid amount per each of the 70 shoppable procedure codes - BCBS only. Recoveries
24 UNC Data Sharing Provide UNC with research data.Re-implement the data sharing relationship with UNC SHEPS center.
25 Vaccine Spend Analysis
Analyze BCBS active member’s vaccine spend for 2016, 2017, 2018, and 2019 for the Provider Reimbursement Strategy. CPP initiative